Ideally it’d be a check that comes close to what they saved from no longer hosting caches themselves.
Ideally it’d be a check that comes close to what they saved from no longer hosting caches themselves.
If the docs I have to write are long enough I will include a small diatribe about a ancient pop-culture hill I’m still willing to die on, just to see if anyone notices.
That looks like the media endpoint in action, all right.
I was thinking pressing it turns everything to shit, but that works too. I’d also accept, completely misunderstood by future generations.
My only real hope out of this is that that copilot button on keyboards becomes the 486 turbo button of our time.
Quick, someone homebrew a D&D Myconid/Warforged hybrid.
I don’t think Lemmy supports media fields in comments (though I’ve only skimmed the API, I could be wrong) just on posts. I usually use Postimages for hosting images for comments.
Be sure to use the image upload field too
We can’t make money paying for “AI”, going to theaters, or paying for streaming services.
So I guess everybody gets a piracy!
The earliest I can think of (from personal experience) is 4GL languages; the early low-code platforms that first started to get traction in the early 80s. They wouldn’t have replaced programmers but some thought/hoped they would usher in an age of “low skill” programmers that companies could get away with paying minimum wage to.
The thing that made me laugh when I saw the article that OP mentions is that it was coming from AWS.
In my testing AWS’s Titan AI is the least useful for figuring out how to do things in AWS. It’s so terrible that Amazon just announced they’re using Claude for Alexa’s upcoming “AI” features.
I made the mistake of asking github copilot about a namespacing issue I was having today. It suggest a course of action that didn’t pan out but was at least semi-sensical but the accompanying example code did the opposite of what it had said. It read like it gave me the text of a stackoverflow accepted answer and then the code from the question.
Never trust Condé Nast to do the right by its consumers. That’s a tale decades old at this point.
Noise may be something to look for when you’re shopping, depending on where your server lives. I have 1 Iron Wolf drive in my NAS (that is in my living room), and it is way louder than the combined noise of 3 WD Reds next to it.
As for failures, Backblaze publishes quarterly failure reports that I always brush up on before looking for a new drive.
Don’t forget the tube trains that the world has known to be a scam for over a century. But at least he was correct when he said Starship would be sending people to Mars in 2022 and 2024, that the cybertruck would work as a boat, that model 3s would appreciate rather than depreciate, that solar roof tiles would replace normal solar panels by 2020, that the tunnels under Vegas would use high speed sleds, that Falcon 9 can be reconditioned for flight faster than the space shuttle, that a $30k Tesla roaster was released in 2017, and Twitter hasn’t become an (even more) hate filled echo chamber.
Best ad for piracy in a while. It not only lets you consume media how ever you’d like it also preserves your ability to be compensated for damages.
Sort of like how excited Wendy’s was to offer surge pricing, until 2 days later when they suddenly had “no plans to ever implement surge pricing, what’re yall talkin’ 'bout?”
Hopefully DeGoogleing will go a bit like the cable “Cord Cutters” did in terms of headlines over time:
Of course, streaming is worse than cable now… so lets learn from that.
I’m curious what monumentally terrible ideas they have for adding machine learning or LLM features to HIDs.
I’ll go out of my way to avoid ever owning any of them, but I’m curious.
In the rare occasions that my wife needs to use my phone, I need to type my (12 digit) pincode out on a number pad and read it back to her to be sure I get it right. I can type it flawlessly a dozen times a day but if I try to recite it, I screw up the order.